Background
HIV/AIDS infections acquired through heterosexual contact make up a large and increasing proportion of all reported cases, particularly among females. Behavioral surveillance among emerging at-risk populations, such as heterosexuals and women of color, will help direct and evaluate local and national HIV prevention efforts during periods of change in the epidemic. Behavioral surveillance among heterosexuals will also assist in focusing local prevention efforts for racial and ethnic minority populations, which face a disproportionate percentage of new HIV infections. It is increasingly important to understand risk factors for these populations so that culturally-specific interventions may be developed.
ICR researchers gained experience working with heterosexuals at risk of HIV while investigating women's reproductive and sexual health in the ICR study Microbicide Acceptability to Prevent HIV in High-Risk Women. During that project and a follow-up project,
Female Condom Use in High Risk Women as Predictor of Microbicide Readiness,
participants reported on their sexual experiences with primary, casual and paying partners in diaries, surveys and interviews. Currently, the ICR project Sustained Safer Behavior (Female Condom Use) in High-Risk Women to Prevent HIV is researching multiple personal, relationship, and contextual factors that affect whether at-risk individuals initiate and sustain female condom use.
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